Why does God allow this to happen? And he says that's what people wanted. We have kids in the- in the room. Clara, also from Breslau, also from a Jewish family. And I just sat at my desk and started reading these. That's like an adult blue whale of chlorine. And it's just sort of approaching. So there's a way in which there's a touch of spark of humanity. He's such a puzzle to me. Maria Matasar-Padilla is our managing director. And I was just astonished-. At this point, David's moved onto a new university and he's teaching an introductory psychology class. I'm not going to give you what you want. There's a pause and my father just says-. So, they sit down in the chair thinking, "Wow. And you find yourself in a situation where you've got to do something that's hard. You know, just because of a mathematical summing up. With higher and higher voltage. You can see this in the surveys that the men filled out after the experiments were over. And there is no doubt that today's plants and animals carry the genetic legacy of ancestors who fought fiercely to survive and reproduce. The most common source of nitrogen is in the air around us. plus-circle Add Review. So, he ends up admitting it. I- horrified is- I was- I was pretty stunned. And he wrote this graphic novel that I read about one of the most prolific serial killers in U.S. history; Gary Leon Ridgeway, the Green River Killer. So he starts experimenting. I just needed to kill her." And they're both secularized Jews. Uh, and he finds her actually still alive with her life running out of her. I mean, you have to remember, during the- during the Crimean War in the 1850s, Europe starves. Does he- is he saying what I think he's saying? It is, arguably, the most significant scientific breakthrough of them all. The Bad Show Publication date Mon, 09 Jan 2012 05:00:00 +0000 We wrestle with the dark side of human nature, and ask whether it's something we can ever really understand, or fully escape. What he means is that when nitrogen atoms are just free floating in the air, they will cling to each other. The subjects range in occupation from corporation presidents to good [inaudible 00:12:29] and plumbers. Visit our website terms of use at www.wnyc.org for further information. "Research in any field is a must, particularly in this day and age." And what he decided to do is go into the ocean, into sea water, which contains very small levels of gold. No. Yeah. Right. Nitrogen is an essential part of amino acids and proteins. Why does God allow this to happen? Those who could still breathe would turn blue. And then he seemed fine. So, I broke up with him. You're not the first one. You know, he takes over leadership in this institution in Berlin and he starts hobnobbing with a whole different level of society. Fast forward 10 years. Now what you need to understand about Alex Haslam is that he hates it when interviewers only want to talk about the baseline study. And he says, "Because of the rage." In front of this really impressive looking machine. And, like, it kind of, like, hurt his feelings. Just a little glimmer. You walk into the room, what do you find? Warning. We realize this is hard work, but what you are doing is for the good of Germany. He walked out of the room, and just started weeping. Prince-nez? He stirs up hatred between friends, between lovers. And the number of chemical reactions. Visit our website terms of use at www.wnyc.org for further information. He is a soldier. Radiolab is supported by Audible. Fat- commit them to memory? Radiolab believes your ears are a portal to another world. And then, he seemed fine when I said goodbye to him. The subjects are 40 males between the ages of 20 and 50. You know, this was like oil is today. The questionnaires they filled out are part of the Milgram archive at Yale. I think they have to be extreme in the extreme. Uh, generates electric shocks. In those days if you're a convicted male felon, you are strung up, but you're not allowed to hang until you die; you're cut down before then. He signs up immediately, sends a letter volunteering for duty-, Saying, "You know the process that I used to make food? And-. But if they were prepared to do that, when I suspect a lot of them would, then we'd say, "These are people who really believe in science, and isn't this a good thing that we have people in our society, who are willing to make sacrifices-. Then you're kind of done with them. There's trench warfare, it gets bogged down and Haber has an idea. David had always known this guy to be pretty mild mannered. He eventually goes to England-. "This was exactly what was in my mind. It's a good one. He travels to the front. He stirs up hatred between friends, between lovers, he even schemes against his own wife. But if they were prepared to do that, and I suspect a lot of them would, um, then we'd say these are people who really believe in science. He walked out of the room and just started weeping. In the best of your memory, which word was matched with nice? This is just somebody who's performing brain surgery without anesthesia on other people. That I remember picking her up and-. "From this time forth, I never will speak a word." Come over now.". But in a us sort of way. Meaning, any idea what was in his mind? Radiolab is supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation, and by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, enhancing public understanding of science, technology in the modern world. You know, what does he say? Continue using the last switch on the board, please. Hi, my name's Josh and I'm calling from Harlem, New York. Of course nobody wants to be killing other people. What you know-". Bred from the air was the phrase. At high temperature. In case you've never heard of this, probably have, but in case you haven't, here's what he did. With AI, blockchain, and quantum technology, IBM is developing smart, scalable technologies that help businesses work better together. And that was a question that had haunted my father for decades. I'm Robert Krulwich. They couldn't deploy it, they couldn't deploy it. Thanks to all our great storytellers, Dan Charles, Sam Kean, Latif Nassar, Fred Kaufman, and Fritz Stern. And my views about human nature are that it affords infinite potential for lightness and dark. Three times a year, two times before-. They wanted someone who was really thrillingly bad, but in the end, was, uh, redeemed a bit. I-. That's right. Telling a friend he felt like he'd lost his homeland. He would dance around things. He just kind of went crazy. Addeddate 2012-10-10 05:15:40 Boxid OL100020610 Identifier wnycs-radiolab_the-bad-show Add Review 4 Views DOWNLOAD OPTIONS 1 file ITEM TILE 4 Files 4 Original Nice job? So you ask like, "Why do people do bad things?". He buried them or left their bodies in these little clumps in the woods. This is just a tsunami of evil that passes through the play. According to some accounts, as they crept across no man's land. Nobody had done what he was about to do on the scale that he was about to do it. And I heard about him from science writer, Sam Kean. in this episode we begin with a chilling statistic: 91% of men, and . I might even tilt towards saying he's a little good to be honest. Like, "Oh my God. Our food source then moves into our bodies. A given episode might whirl you through science, legal history, and into the home of someone halfway across the world. So, you see, it's just in that one experiment that 65% of people are willing to go all the way. But if looked at from another perspective, there is a sense in which you could celebrate what they're doing. And so, I went up to the bedroom and he was, you know, in a rage. To find page after page of yeses. I invited him for dinner and as he was in the kitchen looking stupid peeling the carrots to make salad, I came up to him laughingly, gently so that he wouldn't suspect anything. They're not doing something because they have to, they're doing it because they think they ought to. Well, Sam, what happened to this guy after World War I? About; Blog; Projects; Help; Donate An illustration of a heart shape . These little nitrogen atoms will fiercely hold together, and it's almost impossible to pry them apart. This is, uh, I just want to take a shower. Did members of Haber's family die in the concentration camps? But this is why this is such an interesting guy, around the same time, officials in the U.S. government are calling him a war criminal. You're cut down before then. In a lab at Yale University with a bunch of regular Americans. And on June 13, 2003, Gary was secretly taken out of his jail cell, and brought to a sort of very nondescript, concrete, ugly office building. What makes boys boys and girls girls. That is true. Well I can use that same process-. ", "We'll basically bring it to the front and when the- when the wind is right, we'll just spray it.". This is Radiolab and today talking about? Now, of course you could find some nitrogen out in the world. The general's name is Othello. They're trying to do the right thing. Trim, nice mustache. Yes. Haber's gas troops, unscrew, they open the valves on almost 6,000 tanks, containing 150 tons of chlorine. Well,the experiment requires that you continue. And he says, "That's what people wanted. Radiolab is produced by Jad Abumrad. So, how do you feel about him now because I don't know I can't help but feel bad for the guy? We should say that this next section of the program has some references which are extremely graphic-. And at the very end of the play when everyone finds out what Iago's done, Othello asks him, "Why? So, these are some word pairs. It has enough what they used to call then solar energy. Sap in the next room just because they were being told to? So to speak. I'm [Clemmy Buttonhill 00:26:56], I'm here to tell you about the Open Airs Project, the new podcast form WNYC studios and WQXR, in which people share stories about the classical music that gets them through their lives. Then suddenly the thought occurred to me that my life would be much happier without him in existence.". It's called Too Much Information. What you know you know. More information about Sloan at www.sloan.org. Just a little glimmer. It's like a downloadable from the internet instant defense for doing wrong, but if you look at Milgram's work closely. But as the play goes on, you begin to think that maybe that's just another lie. And as he was in the kitchen, looking stupid, peeling the carrots to make salad, I came up to him laughingly, gently, so that he wouldn't suspect anything. So, I heard this one from this guy named David-. This is what totally pulled me into the story. I invited him for dinner. When you press one of these switches all the way down, the learner gets a shock. We don't exactly know why. And, you know, my view about human nature is that it affords infinite potential for lightness and dark. This was one of the bloodiest arenas on the, uh, Western front. So, there's a way in which it touch a spark of humanity. ", Meanwhile, later that night on the other side of town-. I'm really proud of Job, he believes in me, and he trusts me in so much, and he has such great faith in me. And so, Satan basically systematically destroys Job's life, takes away his wife, his children, all his material possessions. So Jeff wrote this book because his father, Tom Jensen, was one of the lead detectives tracking Gary Ridgeway. Why did you do this?" I'm Jad Abumrad. They've got a very plausible, very credible, high status scientist at high status scientific institution. It has enough, what they used to call then solar energy. And he throws himself in one of the central issues facing Germany that at that time. Our staff includes Simon Adler, Maggie Bartholomew, Becca Bressler, Rachael Cusick, David Gebel, Ethel Hepti, Tracy Hunt, Matt Kielty, the lovely Robert Krulwich, Annie McEwen, Latif Nassar, Malissa O'Donnell, Adrian Wack, Pat Walters, and Molly Webster. As we continue listening to the Bad Show on human nature in our neighbors and ourselves, check out the Wave, which we mirrors the natural shape of your body, or the Casper mattress with zone support for your hips and shoulders for better alignment. Transcript. Yeah. That is if you don't continue, we're going to have to discontinue the experiment. But this was a moment in German history, he says, when Jews had a decent amount of freedom. But in all of these other scenarios, they don't. That's historian, Fritz Stern, who also happens to be Fritz Haber's godson. Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. And that tonnages then moves into our food source, our food source then moves into our bodies, and the rough statistics are that half of each of our bodies contains nitrogen from the Haber process. We were just enacting an old very famous experiment you may have heard about. Yes, this is one of the things that sparked my interest in the topic of murder. Would you really? After all he knows what he can stand. 'cause actually he studied between 20 and 40 different variants of this same paradigm. Then the executioner castrates you, cuts you open, and takes out your internal organs, and then, separates your head, which is put on a post. So, basically at 6:00 pm at April 22nd. Why did you inflict on this suffering on them, on us? He's bald, he has a potbelly, he has these pince-nez spectacles, he's chomping on a Virginian cigar, he was always smoking these Virginian cigars and he's wearing a fur coat. Let's begin with this story from our producer Pat Walters. Bald on top. TRANSCRIPTS We are working to provide transcripts for as much of our programming as we can over. And a mysterious past. There's lots and lots of lessons here, but one is I think when you're enjoying to do something for the greater good, maybe ask yourself the question, "What is greater, and what is good?". Well all right, I'm starting to feel a little bit better about my fellow man. Give me two more minutes. He's a man adrift. I have a choice, I'm not going to go ahead with it. By the way, that's reporter [Latif Nassar 00:30:59]. He claimed they were in the middle of a sex act, he would get distracted, something would happen. Nice sky? You're telling us all this. Nothing to be ashamed of. And you know there's nothing a closet full of clothes to help balance that out. What's interesting is that how all of these struggles, all of them, play out the same way. In fact, his chemist had given this particular pesticide a smell. Now, as we sort of know in life, lots of things that we if they're worthwhile doing, they're not always easy. Here it goes. It's a pretty (bleep) thing to miss, isn't it really? Um, I got a little, uh, I- my- this is my dorsal hair stood up when I read the end of this. September 15, 2022 Radiolab for Kids and WNYC Studios present Terrestrials, a six-episode miniseries hosted by Lulu Miller (co-host of Radiolab . And as it happens, my father has very vivid memories of investigating the Carol Christensen murder. Times. Now what you need to understand about Alex Haslem is that he hates it when interviewers only want to talk about the baseline study. It gets bogged down. In fact we hate being told. Check out the Blank Slate, a book by Steven Pinker, one of the world's leading experts on language and the mind. Why did you do this?" And almost like blaming the victims. Yeah, I agree with that. Yeah. The authoritative record of New York Public Radios programming is the audio record. That afternoon, he gets in his car, goes home, he finds my mom on the deck, sits down next to her. That afternoon, he gets in his car, goes home, he finds my mom on the deck, sits down next to her. He had women participants. According to James, he's not the baddest in Shakespeare or in life because ultimately the play offers up a reason for his nastiness. Take one. So he felt publicly humiliated. A lot of them are like, "This is not how you fight a war.". And he said, "Look, this is what you're going to do is Of course, you don't want to do this. 2012-06-22 . Speaking with Carol's mom, Carol's little daughter-, Killed her. So, you ask like, why do people do bad things? This- this is really important. Three, two, one. The use of it, he couldn't have imagined. The prods. And why I cared for her because I dated her before, but this day didn't turn out right. In the other room, there was a guy who he called the learner who is supposed to have memorized some words. The story of Job is that one day God and Satan are having a conversation, and they're saying, "Have you checked out Job? So wait. I got those all at night, mostly. How could you? We've got to know now. Let's go into our instructions. ", "Set deadly enmity between two friends make poor men's cattle break their necks, set fire on barns and haystacks in the night, and bid the owners quench, you quench with their tears. And it's this defense. We encounter a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil, turn to one of the most famous (and misunderstood) psychology experiments ever, talk to a man who chased one of the most prolific . Obedience droops to about 40 percent [inaudible 00:15:40]. And he is basically homeless at this point. In- in other words, nitrogen has really strong attachments to itself. He says, "Well, we can drive those enemy soldiers out of trenches with gas.". So every day, they would bring them into this conference room-, This is a continuation of an interview with Gary Leon Ridgeway-. I mean it's a pretty heady thing for a Jewish kid from Breslau to be hobnobbing with the Emperor, and cabinet ministers, he's part of the club; and he really, really relished it. He claimed they were in the middle of a sex act, he would get distracted, something would happen, he just kind of went crazy, he had snapped; and almost blaming the victims. No, because if you couldn't afford a ticket for a play, you'd seen all the plays, in the 1500s, you could always go to a public hanging. The Green River murders terrorized Seattle in the 1980s. We were just enacting an old, very famous experiment that you may have heard about. Because the thing that you put into the ground to grow more food is also the thing you can explode to make a bomb? God, 'cause it's like we started with this experiment that we all see as evidence of human's latent capacity of evil. He said that if I ever had a relationship with another man, he was going to send videos of us having sex to all the people in my university. And as it happens, my father has very vivid memories of investigating the Carol Christensen murder. Yeah, I agree with that. Uh, walked in and asked his wife, uh, where this friend of mine was. Well what's the noble cause in this case? The fourth product is-. But if you think that's the right thing, if you think that science is worth pursuing you say, "Okay, I'll go along with this.". Want to talk about bad people in Shakespeare. Under extreme, extreme pressure. We asked, "Who do you think about killing?" We're going to meet her later. ", Yeah, so here's the interesting thing. [inaudible 00:21:03] just cut it out. Very distinctive looking man, bald on top, trim nice mustache, wore a little [pince-nez 00:28:20]. Again, it's a pretty big thing to miss. But if looked at from another perspective, there's a sense in which you could celebrate what they're doing. Here's what he did. Hey this is Jad, RadioLab is supported by IBM. Yeah. And-. This is Radiolab and today we're talking about Well, we're trying to think about what goes on in the mind of a bad person. Transcripts and recorded audio may be available for many of the programs you hear on WNYC. Only then does God speak up and kind of say, like, "You're gonna question me?" The expectation is somebody is made to make his peace with his maker before he dies. "This was exactly what was on my mind. And is found by her son. Wow. I really want to do a good job.". And, uh, she had got a disgusted look on her face and said that he was up in the bedroom. Finally, acknowledging, yeah, that's true. Was he trying to make a commentary or something? Who they would kill, where they'd do it, when. And I designed a little, um, questionnaire where I simply ask the students, you know, "Have you ever thought about killing someone?" So in the Milgram case. And now that we're sort of just on the other side of that. But we ended up walking this question around different people-. And he said, "To start, you want to know about bad? And, uh, so does Clara. But in a famous incident, one of England's leading scientists refuses to shake his hand. This is Radiolab, and today we're going to get back, so to speak. But what you're doing is for the good of Germany, and this is necessary in order to advance our noble cause.". Making him the most prolific serial killer in American history. To find page after page of yeses. Okay, it's all right, but we've got to know that. Just give me your finger, [crosstalk 00:09:28] I'm going to-. This is sort of chilling comparison, which is a speed that Himmler gave to the SS, some SS leaders, when they were, uh, about to commit a range of atrocities. Thanks also to reporter Aaron Scott for that story. And my father wasn't buying it. The subjects of 40 males between the ages of 20 and 50. We will begin with this test. Hi, my name is Josh, and I'm calling from Harlem, New York. The first victims of the Green River killer were found in the summer of 1982. Hmm. The shocker would say, "Hell no I don't.". Now, we're seeing about a 100 million tons of synthetic fertilizer produced industrially each year and that tonnages then moves into our food source. Okay. There's something deeply, deeply wounding, stressing, upsetting at the thought that he had anything to do with zyklon B; but he did. And once again, another nitrogen compound. Well, I mean, I know that sir, but I mean, he's up to a 195 volts. One that applies smart technologies at scale with purpose and expertise; not just for some, but for all. Yes. And in the trial, when the prosecutors essentially ask him, "How you came to commit genocide?" So during World War I, Haber's Institute had developed a formulation of insect killing gas called zyklon. Stanley Milgram had four scripted prods that he wrote out for his experimenters for when the subjects didn't want to continue. We take a look at one particular fantasy lurking behind these numbers, and wonder what this shadow world might tell us about ourselves and our neighbors. And 84 percent of the women. To him, he seemed calm and I left, and went home. James Shapiro, professor of English at Columbia University. Imagine they really had to administer shocks to themselves or something. When I stand before you, judges of Israel, in this court to accuse Adolf Eichmann. My name's Benjamin Walker and here are some RadioLab credits. Who's going to do this powerful piece of science. Birds would just fall from the air. Walked in and asked his wife where this friend of mine was, and she got a disgusted look on her face, and said that he was up in the bedroom. Anytime the experimenter said, "You must continue." In other words, nitrogen has really strong attachments to itself. And he says, "Can I come over and sleep on your couch? People like director Sam Mendez, musicians Jean Batiste, and Wynton Marsalis, Call Your Girlfriends [inaudible 00:27:12], and our very own Alec Baldwin. How many of them went into that kind of detail? Okay. Carries electric shocks. Was it nice day? So, the subject seemed willing to shock another human being, but as soon as you say it's an order. And I used to socialize with him and- and his wife. We have nothing. One of those very tiny, old fashioned, uh, pair of glasses that would pinch on your nose. And according to some accounts, as it crept across no man's land-. An mlsconsumeraccess.org number 3030. His was the first generation when a young Jewish boy could truly imagine that he could just be a regular part of that society, he could do anything. You know [crosstalk 00:10:58]. You better check in on him sir. Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. Oft have I digged up dead men from their graves and set them upright at their dear friend's door. And he finds her actually still alive, with the life about to run out of her. So Stanley Milgram actually begins these experiments the same year that Adolf Eichmann goes on trial for Nazi war crimes. And what happens is that you're- you're elbowing the nit- nitrogen apart from itself and then, forcing it to bond with a hydrogen in a new way. This is Everybody was desperate for sources, new sources of nitrogen. Can you hear me? Well, let's talk about Fritz Haber. The time now is 08:36 hours. Hey wait! We, as onlookers to this study, we have this kind of godlike sort of vision of like, "Well, of course, what they're doing is wrong." In Shakespeare, or life. Uh, Haber it's unknown what happened for the rest of that evening, but it is a well-documented fact that the very next morning. Thanks. There's something deeply, deeply wounding, stressing, upsetting a thought that he had anything to do with Zyklon B, but he did. And, you know, the class ended and I went back to my office. And I devoted one class session to the topic of homicide and why people kill. This actually brings us to the first topic of the hour, so let me Just to set it up. We lived together for a couple months, he was very aggressive, he started calling me a whore, and told me he didn't love me anymore, so I broke up with him. But the weird thing is that he decides not just to take down Othello, but everybody. Y-P-R-E-S, Actually the Americans called it [inaudible 00:36:42]. He could have never imagined that. I knew she had a daughter and-. 10s, 10, 15, 20 times. She says, "What happened today?" We'll be right back. And you tell us, "Actually, you know under some circumstances, we don't do the bad thing we're told to do because, here's another flip, we don't have to be told. She was actually, uh, sort of a genius herself. Uh, he was doing his- his great science work right around the turn of, uh, the 20th century. More information about Sloan at www.sloan.org. Podcast Transcripts of Radiolab Radiolab Society & Culture Science Latest Transcripts What Up Holmes? Hi, I'm Robert Krulwich. No one has a monopoly on bad. For information about Sloan, at www.sloan.org. Read these words. ", "Even- even when their sorrows almost were forgot. That's Stanley Milgram talking about the experiment in a film in case you've never heard of this. If those two participants refused to go on-, Saying like, "I don't want to kill a guy. And that's all the difference in the world. That's one of the things we have to know and that's why it's okay to let out. Really, that story's been told a million and one times for the last 50 years, we've just got to get over it. He was trying to repeat this master stroke. Radiolab is supported in part by the Alfred P Sloan Foundation enhancing public understanding of science and technology in the modern world. The fourth prod is. I do not stand alone. A lot of WNYC podcasts do transcripts-- I know On the Media does. Especially when it came to one particular fact. So, he starts experimenting. But if you look at Milgram's work closely. So, you know, around this point, I just don't want to have anything to do with this guy. And on June 13th, 2003, Gary was secretly taken out of his jail cell and brought to this sort of very nondescript concrete ugly office building and, um, over the next six months from June to early December. We ask deep questions and use investigative journalism to get the answers. Look. In graphic detail. To continue. here are some Radiolab credits the class ended and 'm! Wrote out for his experimenters for when the subjects are 40 males between the of... A bomb he says, `` to start, you ask like, I... Them, on us in that one experiment that 65 % of are. Episode might whirl you through science, legal history, and quantum,. Latent capacity of evil that passes through the play goes on, you know, my has! On my mind statistic: 91 % of people are willing to another. Used to socialize with him and- and his wife, his children, all his material.! Fiercely hold together, and today we 're going to give you what you.., arguably, the 20th century of Israel, in this institution Berlin... Take a shower arenas on the, uh, she had got a very plausible, very experiment. At from another perspective, there is a must, particularly in institution. Ibm is developing smart, scalable technologies that help businesses work better together, of course you find... Are willing to go all the way, that 's what people wanted left their bodies in little! In one of the things we have to, they could n't deploy,. Difference in the world are 40 males between the ages of 20 and 50 in the room! This story from our producer Pat Walters 's okay to let out members Haber... The scale that he wrote out for his experimenters for when the subjects range in from. Do on the Media does Radiolab believes your ears are a portal to another world which extremely... 'S up to a 195 volts he wrote out for his experimenters for when the of. Serial killer in American history of society had always known this guy to be pretty mild mannered to... Walker and here are some Radiolab credits let me just to set it up percent [ 00:12:29... Containing 150 tons of chlorine memory, which contains very small levels of gold with... Technologies that help businesses work better together happier without him in existence. `` a sense in which it a... Desperate for sources, New sources of nitrogen you fight a War. `` may be available for many them! So during world War I be killing other people Christensen murder story our... Back to my office he walked out of trenches with gas. `` the play everyone... Around this point, David 's moved onto a New University and he finds her actually alive. You may have heard about, on us Milgram talking about the baseline study Shapiro, of... Enough what they 're doing you have n't, here 's what people wanted could some! Same year that Adolf Eichmann goes on trial for Nazi War crimes about to do on the does... The topic of homicide and why people kill feel bad for the?! Nitrogen atoms will fiercely hold together, and the ocean, into sea water, which word radiolab the bad show transcript matched nice. This actually brings us to the bedroom and he said, `` Wow between lovers as the play their... Anytime the experimenter said, `` Wow hold together, and he said, `` is... Of the world lab at Yale middle of a mathematical summing up what Holmes. To shake his hand maybe that 's true were found in the chair thinking, well... Would happen bit better about my fellow man pretty stunned the last switch on the other room, into! Which word was matched with nice not how you fight a War. `` which extremely. Are that it affords infinite potential for lightness and dark walking this question around people-... Turn of, uh, she had got a very plausible, very famous experiment we! From Harlem, New York to some accounts, as they crept across no man land... Haslem is that he decides not just to take down Othello, but as the play when everyone out... N'T, here 's what he was about to do a good job. `` think about?. And set them upright at their dear friend 's door doing it because have... At scale with purpose and expertise ; not just to take down Othello, but in case you 've heard! Meanwhile, later that night on the board, please passes through play... I cared for her because I dated her before, but what you need understand. N'T continue, we can over sap in the middle of a mathematical summing up stirs up hatred friends! Latif Nassar 00:30:59 ], Latif Nassar 00:30:59 ] said goodbye to.. I have a choice, I just want to talk about the baseline study but if looked at another. A downloadable from the internet instant defense for doing wrong, but in all of these struggles, all these. 'S what he was about to do it storytellers, Dan Charles, Sam Kean, Latif Nassar 00:30:59.. What happened to this guy to be honest the, uh, I 'm not to. And then, he seemed calm and I devoted one class session to the first of. Between lovers and just started weeping okay, it kind of detail this in the topic of the lead tracking! Amp ; Culture science Latest transcripts what up Holmes was about to do is go the... Lot of WNYC podcasts do transcripts -- I know on the,,! To run out of trenches with gas. `` his hand that when nitrogen atoms will fiercely together... Passes through the play goes on trial for Nazi War crimes New University and he 's teaching an psychology... Expectation is somebody is made to make his peace with his maker before dies. Know I ca n't help but feel bad for the guy fine when I before! Is Everybody was desperate for sources, New sources of nitrogen is the! And age. at scale with purpose and expertise ; not just to set up... Of gold lab at Yale University with a bunch of regular Americans is not how you came to genocide... A formulation of insect killing gas called zyklon for some, but if looked radiolab the bad show transcript from perspective. 'S interesting is that how all of them went into that kind of detail 's true before, but mean. Miss, is n't it really this friend of radiolab the bad show transcript was day, they sit down in the topic homicide. Does he- is he saying what I think they ought to University with a chilling statistic: %! Nassar, Fred Kaufman, and just started weeping what he means is that how all them... Experiments the same year that Adolf Eichmann out are part of the we... 'D do it, he seemed fine when I said goodbye to him of 1982 own. It gets bogged down and Haber has an idea amount of freedom down Othello, but soon! Get the answers start, you have to be extreme in the air around us Americans... Day, they open the valves on almost 6,000 tanks, containing 150 tons of chlorine vivid memories of the. With his maker before he dies to take down Othello, but I mean, I just do continue. Ca n't help but feel bad for the guy between 20 and 50 essentially ask,... Warfare, it kind of say, like, hurt his feelings to.! Your finger, [ crosstalk 00:09:28 ] I 'm not going to on-! 'S moved onto a New University and he finds her actually still alive with! Acknowledging, Yeah, that 's reporter [ Latif Nassar, Fred Kaufman, and in and his! Amp ; Culture science Latest transcripts what up Holmes he wrote out for his for... Of insect killing gas called zyklon best of your memory, which contains very small levels of.... Have heard about them upright at their dear friend 's door, where friend... See as evidence of human 's latent capacity of evil that passes the! River murders terrorized Seattle in the topic of homicide and why people kill ( bleep ) to... Who 's performing brain surgery without anesthesia on other people 40 males between the ages of 20 and 50 gets! Friends, between lovers, he could n't deploy it, when closet full of clothes to help that! Charles, Sam, what happened to this guy named David- ( bleep ) thing to,. 'S one of England 's leading experts on language and the mind graves and set them upright their!, Fritz Stern with nice fact, his children, all of them all scenarios, they will cling each... Scale that he decides not just for some, but I mean, you know the... Out are part of the things we have to discontinue the experiment to each other decides just! This particular pesticide a smell investigative journalism to get back, so speak... Be available for many of them went into that kind of say, like, `` do. ( bleep ) thing to miss TILE 4 Files 4 Original nice job with AI, blockchain and... Up dead men from their graves and set them upright at their dear friend 's.! Surgery without anesthesia on other people you inflict on this suffering on them, play out the Blank Slate a! He trying to make his peace with his maker before he dies percent... The Media does terms of use at www.wnyc.org for further information to another!

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radiolab the bad show transcript

radiolab the bad show transcript